As Britain tries to redefine Judaism for Jews, Jews everywhere wonder…can this be good? “Is being a Jew a matter of bloodline or religious practice? The UK’s new Supreme Court is debating the subject this week, in a case that could have a wider impact on faith schools, says Tim Whewell.” (Very interest comments from Brits…who seem to be in agreement about Judaism being “racist.”)

“I’m a North London, working-class, black, Jewish girl,” actress Sophie Okonedo said. “I love my upbringing because it had so many different colors; it’s given me the equipment to play lots of diverse roles.”

Hilarious article about Irish-Italian convert Yisrael Campbell and his three (yes, three) circumcisions. Here’s a soundbite: “And his father? Not the most observant of Catholics, observes his son the Jew. “When I explained to him that I couldn’t turn lights on on Shabbat,” and that even the refrigerator light that would go on when the fridge opened was restricted, his father eyed him and opined, “Do you really think God cares that a light goes on when you open the refrigerator door?””

“The National Conversion Authority is run under the auspices of the Chief Rabbinate, and Chief Sephardi Rabbi Shlomo Amar has the final say on conversion policy. But many haredi city rabbis refuse to recognize its conversions because they claim that Druckman’s religious Zionist agenda casts doubt on his rabbinic authority. As a result, dozens of converts who have attempted to register in cities such as Ashdod, Petah Tikva, Rehovot, Ma’aleh Adumim and Beersheba have been turned away by the local rabbis because they are not considered Jewish.”

“[Ori]Konforti, who until last year was the Jewish Agency’s representative in Ethiopia, says that American-Jewish groups wish to keep the immigration of the Falashmura going in order to generate more contributions from supporters who want to be involved in tikkun olam (“repairing the world” activities), enhance the bringing together of Jews from around the world and improve their own relations with the black community in the United States. Israel, he says, became entangled in commitments to the Falashmura, a group with an almost infinite potential for immigration, due to pressure by nongovernmental organizations and politicians, especially from the Shas party.”

“The resolution also paved the way for a whole new class of what Rabbi Gordon calls “green card” mothers to emerge — gentile women who enthusiastically schlep their children to Hebrew school, volunteer on synagogue committees and host Shabbat dinners, even if they choose not to undergo a conversion. In recent years, many of those women have received support from the proliferation of the Jewish Outreach Institute’s Mothers Circle groups around the country.”

“The question of whether non-Orthodox converts should be included in the Law of Return has also been debated for decades. Since the 1970 amendment, the ultra-Orthodox parties in Knesset have advocated limiting the Law of Return to Orthodox converts.”

“They trace their Jewish roots to the 15th and 16th centuries, to the Spanish and Portuguese Inquisitions in which thousands of Jews were murdered and countless others were forced into exile or to convert. Many became crypto-Jews, practicing secretly. They were classified in Jewish law as Anusim, Jews who are forced to abandon their religion against their will, but continue to practice insofar as possible. Their modern-day descendants call themselves Bnei Anusim – sons or children of the Anusim. They are also known by the derogatory Spanish term “Marranos” (“swine”).”

“The survival of Israel needs 200 million Jews around the world, which means it’s a question of conversion. This question is not really addressed. We should have a much broader definition of who is a Jew, and active conversion. We should accept anybody who has one Jewish parent or was raised in a Jewish family or wants to live as a Jew. And if you apply the Law of Return to people who are distantly Jewish, that will change the picture significantly.”

“The Supreme Court this week granted the Equalities and Human Rights Commission the right to be an intervener in the forthcoming appeal case, which will enable it to make submissions to the court. JFS, the country’s largest Jewish school, is trying to reverse a decision by the Court of Appeal in June that it is unlawful to offer places on the basis of whether a child’s parent is Jewish.”

The case of a Jewish school accused of breaching race relations laws over admissions could have ramifications for other faith schools, ministers say. (I still can’t get over the fact that Britain has decided Judaism is a “race.”)

People magazine, not used to covering Sheva Brachot, fumbles the explanation over the ritual 7-day after wedding celebrations calling this one a so-called “Reception No.2” held by the Kusher family, Ivanka’s in-laws.

So Ivanka Trump has sleeves on her wedding dress to conform to Orthodox standards of modesty (some people are upset she didn’t cover the elbows, too) and now, it’s going to turn into a fashion trend for everyone? Wow.